-
July 30, 19141 ~~ -~
WAR Blshop Butler once speculated on the pos-
sibility of a whole nation going suddenly insane. If he were
alrve to-day, he could extend his query and ask If a half-dozen na-
tions at once might not become crazy. In Vienna, in Paris, in
Berlin, ~n St Peters burg, he would see signs of acute mania af-
flictlng large bodies of people. Mob psychol- ogy often shows
itself ~n discouragmg and alarmlng forms, but IS never so repulsive
and appalling as when ~t is seen in great crowds shouting f o r war
Lest we forget, indeed! About nothing does the mob forget so IY as
about war. The Parisian crowd i s cry- ing out to-day % Berlin!
Just as if the same madness had not filled the streets of Pans m
1870, with what ravage and hu- millation to follow, others have not
forgot- ten even if the French mob has. And the way m which the
war-fever has selzed upon Berlln seems equally to call for the
services not of a physician, but of an alienist. If one looked only
at these surface manifestatlqns, one would be tempted t o conclude
that Eu- rope was about to become a glgantic mad- house
Indications have long been that the mlli- tarist party, which
has the upper hand in Austria, intended to have a war with Servia,
no matter what that country did. The origi- nal demands made by
Austrla upon the Servian Government were imperious in the extreme.
That they were ~ntended to pro- voke a refusal and to brmg on
hostilities 1s now clear F o r the Servlan reply, which was a n
almost complete submisslon, was promptly declared by the Vlenna
Govern- ment to be, not merely unsatisfactory, but dishonest It
would be hard to Bnd rough- er language in a diplomatic note More-
over, we next had the cool announcement that, even If Servla were t
o comply literally wlth every detail of the Austrian ultimatum, it
would be too late The Austrian troops must have then long-awalted
war If a de- cent pretext could n o t be found, the Aus- trian
forwards would proceed without one.
All this has come as a great surprise t o Americans The shock
caused by the assas- sination of Archduke Ferdinand was fully
realized ~n thls country, but the later news d~spatches gave us in
thls country very few premonitions of the sequel. Yet the foreign
newspapers, covering the period from the first t o the middle of
July, have now come to hand, and they make the state of affairs
much plainer From them i t is evident that a press and militarist
campaign against Ser- via was at once set on foot in Vlenna, Thls
did not confine itself t o thg natural out-
The N a t i o n ~.
bursts of grief and anger at the murder 01 the heir to the
throne, but went violently into the whole matter of the Serb
movement and the threat to Austr~a which it was al. leged to mean.
There were signs In plenty that the old Emperor. Francis Joseph,
was pushed aside, more o r less, by the aggressive party. He once
went so far as to send statement to the press denying some of the
assertions which the army men had father ed; but his aged hand was
too feeble t o withstand the onrush. Those who had so confidently
counted upon the Archduke Fer. dinand, as one who would take a high
tone in foreign reIations, were determined not t o be balked by hls
death. So manifest was their purpose that the Hamburg Fremdew
bZatt, so early as July 4, spoke of an attack by Austrla upon
Servia as a settled thing. The only question was whether Russla
would be drawn into the struggle: in that case, asserted the
Fremdenblatt, there can be not a particle of doubt that the German
Ambas- sador i n St. Petersburg would notify the Czar that Germany
would conslder it a BundnasfaZ2-that is, that Germany, under her
treaty with. Austria, would be compelled t o go to war with
Russia.
Quotations could be multiplied from t h e Vienna papers of the
first and second week cf July, going tb show the zeal displayed in
manufacturing, not alone an anti-Servian spirit, but a demand for
war Thus the oflicial DeutscAes Vollcsblatt publlshed the decislon
of the Council of Ministers to apply the severest measures to the
S&-bs i n Bos- nia These were t o include even a rlgorous
control of their schools, into which military dlsciplihe would be
introduced. It also as- serted that Austrian officials must be ad-
mitted t o the inquiry which the Servian Gov- ernment was to make
into the assassination at SaraJevo The Neues Waener Tagehlatt spoke
of the satisfactlon caused by the be- lief that Austria would soon,
i f necessary, intervene with ener,T in Servia A strong- er tone
was held by the Rezchsposc, which declared that diplomatic methods
would be of no avail wlth Servia, whlch ought t o be dealt with by
Austria summarlly. The
Freze Presse looked ahead actual intervention, or to war, and
argued that Russia ought t o give Austria a free hand at Melgrade,
since it was clear that the am- bitlons and the plottings of the
Serbs con- stltuted a danger to all Europe, as well as to Austria,
aqd must be sternly repressed The general attitude of the .,Vienna
press was pot- badly,,represented by the^ Reachs- post when it
asserted that Austria was not
~ ~,
15-31 threatening Servia, but that Servia was menacing the Dual
Monarchy.
To all this, the official declaration of war by Austrla was the
lnevitable sequel. It is a step which was taken without a decent
regard for the opinion of mankind, and is fraught with consequences
whxh may easily amount to that terrlble catastrophe o f whlch Sir
Edward Grey solemnly warned Europe on Monday. The dullest must see
that what Austria is driving at IS not simply a blow at
Pan-Serbism, but t h e acquisition of Servian terrltory. This,
however, would surely not be permitted by the Powers, no matter how
rapid may be the triumph of Austria?_arms, without reference to a
Eu- ropean Conference. The German Emperor has refused to assent to
the calling of such a Conference in advance, i n order t o pre-
vent war, if possible, but it will have to come later-unless,
indeed, all the Continental niL- tlons should, drawn into the
conflict which Austria has arrogantly and wickedly begun.
WILSONS USE OF In requesting the President to withdraw
from the Senate his nomination as a mem- ber of the Federal
Reserve Board, Mr. Thom- as D. Jones has behaved as handsomely as
he has done throughout the entlre affair. The country knew nothing
about him be- fore, but it now knows him to be a man of exceptional
sigor, independence, and high- mmdedness. It is ev~dent that the
striking testimonial to him, signed by the leading merchants and
bankers of Chicago, did not over-state his qualifications.
This 1s said to be the Presidents first not- able defeat in
Congress. It is such in the sense that Mr. Jones was his personal
choice for the Federal Reserve Board, and that he urged a
confirmation with all the power of hls Administration. Mr. Wilsons
letter to Senator Owen, 111 behalf of Mr. Jones, was not ~ntended,
it is reported, for publication. It was gmen out inadvertently. But
in its statement about Mr. Joness connection wlth the Harvester
Company, ~t showed that the President was not fully informed, and
gave an openmg for the preJudice and anlmus which have been so
unhappily displayed. Against them Mr. Wllson has not been able to
make head.
It IS one thing, however, to be defeated, and a different thing
to utilize defeat in such a way as to strengthen ones posltion for
the future. This is what President Wilson has done ~n his
remarkable letter accepting the declination of Mr. Jones. Besides
express-
-
ing a very clear and biting opinion of the petty attitude of
Senators Hitchcock and Reed, Be has seized the occasion to set
forth certain convictions and principles of his own which cannot
fail to commend him to the sober Judgment of Americans who think.
the first place, he has put vividly his concep- tion of the new
banking system as a great instrument for the general good upon
which it is an outrage for partisanship to lay its hand. Anything
like party scheming captious meddling, in connection with it, is a
wrong to the whole country. In the en- deavor to establish sounder
financial meth- ods and to bring about a genuine prosperity, there
should be, affirms the President, unit- ed effort, with nothing of
partisan preJu- dice o r class antagonism. Wlth marked emphasis he
writes: I believe that the judg- ment and desire of the whole
country cry out for a new temper in affairs.
What the President means bg-this, he has made very definite.
There has been a spirit of proscription in the air. Against some
classes of men there has been the grossest discrimination. They
have been lumped to- gether, after the fashion of the French Revo-
lution, as Enemies of the People. one wanted an example of this,
one could find it in the ranting in which Senator Reed was
indulging last Thursday at the very mo- ment when the news of Mr.
Joness with- drawal was made known in the Senate. Could we believe
him, there are whole groups of rapacious Americans going about to
oppress and devour their fellow-citizens. It is the Terror come
again. O cocrse, a man like Senator Reed is more than
half-conscious that he is talking clap-trap. He 1s simply holding
up bogey-men before his frightened constituents. But the effect of
such tirades as his is most mischievous. It tends not only to
exclude a man like Mr. Jones from a pub- lic service which he was
ready to undertake a t a Personal sacrifice, but to prevent oth-
ers of his kind from subjecting themselves to similar vilidcation
and rebuffs. This was a point made by the impressive array of Chi-
cago men who urged the co-rmation of Mr. Jones. How, they asked, if
he IS rejected, can we expect men of hlgh character and marked
ability to undertake public work for the nation? They saw clearly
that the course of the Senate was putting a premium on little and
subservient men. President Wilsoi, too, sees it, and makes plain
his ab- horrence of the small-minded and intolerant attitude which
would shut out great ca- pacity from great services. In the most
ex- pllcit language, he declared in hisletter that the manifest
injytice done t o Mr Jones
T h e Nat ion [Vol. 99, No. 2561 was not in keeping with the
desires and the demands of a generous, fair, and honorable people;
and he stamped upon the whole idea of proscribing any class when it
is a question of enlisting the best skill and the truest patriotic
devotion in the great con- structive work of government.
Some people in Washington have intimat- ed that this Erst defeat
of the President will be as a letting out of the waters. Hereafter,
they pretend to think, Senate or House will feel at liberty to deny
or thwart him. This will be as it will be. No cool observer ever
supposed that President Wilsons extraordi- nary ascendency over
Congress could be in- definitely maintained. But it is far from be-
ing at an end as yet. And in the way in which he has so seized upon
his first strik- ing check as to cover his enemies with hu-
miliation and t o get his own strong purpose more clearly before
the country than ever before, is plain warning that some men do not
cease to be formidable simply because they are defeated. Of Mr.
Wilson it may evidently be said, as it was of an English statesman,
that he has a terrible. re- bound.
As the first month of the operation in New York State of the
Workmens Com- pensation act draws t o a close, its reality as a
factor in the peoples life becomes ap- parent in the news of the
day. Such head- lines as A Thousand Claims a Day for Corn-
pensation, Forty-eight Deaths in Twenty- three Days, bring home
vividly to the mind how large a part the simple and comprehen- sive
mechanism of the new system Is going to play in reducing distress
and relieving anxiety among the great mass of toilers in this
Stat?, and in preserving to thousands of children opportunities
education and advancement of which a wholly unexpect- ed blow of
fate might otherwise have de- prived them. That the law has marked
faults, and that, aside from any specific de- fects, the system
will carry with it difficul- ties and evils that must be reckoned
with as an offset to its benefits, may be admitted; but the feeling
must be well-nigh universal, among persons of right instincts, that
here has been accomplished a great stroke in the fight against
human misery, a great ad- dit ion to the sum of human
happiness.
That the cost of this great gain has to be paid and that it will
be borne by the people a t large in their capacity as consum- ers,
is also being broughJhome in ,yarious ways One of the most
definite, and i n some
respects most interesting, instances of this is furnished by the
action of a number of the laundry companies, which have adopt- ed
the simple plan of adding one cent to their charge for each bundle
of laundry de- livered. On the slip it is distinctly stated that
this is done on account of the cost of the Workmens Compensation
law, the com- pany adding that they are firm bellevers in workmens
compensation, but it undoubted- ly increases the cost of
production. From the beginning, the advocates of the legisla- tion
have planted themselves on the ground that. the burden of accidents
occurring in the ordinary operation of an industry ought not to be
borne by the individuals who hap- pen to be the victims, but ought
to be re- gaTded as a normal charge upon the busi- ness, the cost
entailed by proper compensa- tion for injury or death to enter into
the accounts on the same basis as the outlay for fuel, or light, or
fire-insurance, or taxes And although it took some time for this
idea to become familiar to the public, it must be saia that as soon
as it was clearly grasped it met everywhere with ready acceptance.
There has been no false pretence in the advocacy of the policy, nor
has there, among intelligent people, been any mlsunderstand- ing as
to the nature of Its working. We were all supposed to be very
willing to pay our share, as consumers, for that which it was
clearly desirable should be done and for which, if done, it was
clearly equitable that the consumers should pay. Nevertheless, it
is fortunate that in this little matter of the laundry people are
made to realize express- ly and palpably, even though on a small
scale, that these things have to be paid for, not by an abstract
entity called the State, but by John Smith or Mary Jones, in the_
very concrete capacity of a wearer of shirts and stockings.
L
As for the amount of burdens of this kind in general, when they
are realized at all, it must be confessed that people are prone to
magnify rather than to belittle them. the cost of living should
continue to rise, or even should continue at its present high
level, there will doubtless be a great deal said about the way in
which the compensa- tion act has aggravated the situation. Ge-
nerically, such talk is perfectly Justified; specifically, it is
apt to be very loose and ir- responsible. The same kind of thing is
true, too, about the burdens laid upon the com- munity by the
ever-increasing demands upon State and city governments humanitar-
ian institutions, for education and public health, and for the
maintenance of condi- tions conducive better living for-the
mass-
-
es. But the cold figures, when looked at, large as they are in
themselves, are seen to be very small 1n comparison with the ag-
gregate expenditures of the well-to-do and the rich. To imagme, as
some have done, that the mamtenance of their standzrd of comfort by
even the fairly well-to-do, or their ability to rear a family, is
seriously affect- ed by the cost of the States philanthropic
activities is to form arithmetical conclusions without arithmetical
data. The state of mind at the bottom of such notions IS not
altogether unlike t h a t which was wittily ex posed by a
public-spirited man of wealth, a short time ago. If any man tells
you,he said to the solicitor for a charity for whlch a vigorous
campaign was made, that he is being called upon for so many things
that he is afraid_ he- will end in the EoorEouse, just tell him
that whenever he gets to the poorhouse I will refund to him all the
mon- ey he has ever spent on charity.
We must avoid both the extreme of ignor- ing the seriousness of
the expense that may be involved in the multiform schemes which
fall under the comprehensive designation of social betterment, and
the other extreme of crying out in exaggerated alarm whenever any
such scheme is broached. Large as is the scope of this compensation
for injuries and the expense thereof, it has limits which would
seem to be pretty well fixed from the beginnmg by obvious
conditions. This is not the case with old-age pensions, nor with
penslon schemes generally; and in these there are apt also to enter
factors which may be far more demoralizing, both as to poli- tics
and as to individual life, than is the case with the system of
compensation for ac- cident.
TRIALS: The picturesque proceedings in the Cail-
laux trial bring to the front, more vividly than anything that
has happened since the . Dreyfus case, the contrast between
Continen. tal crlamal procedure and that prevailing throughout the
English-speaking world. Great as are the differences Inherent In t
h e two Juristic systems, the contrast is per- haps greatest
between the Continental sys- tem as practiced in France and the
English system as exemplified in the United States. Reading the
reports of what has gone on day after day in the Paris courtroom,
one-flnds ones self in a world so different from that depicted in
any great trial in New York, that one hardly feels as if the same
name should be applied to the two things. A person whose habiis and
training had caused him t a ~~
believe thai either was marked out by sacred and indisputable
principles as the only just method of establishing the truth of a
crim- inal case might easily fall into the error of looking upon
the other as absurd or mon- strous. What, admit hearsay and
sentlment, let witnesses deliver stump speeches, and drag in any
fact, however remote, that they
their counsel fancy may have some influ- ence on the jurys
Judgment? How can a jury deal responsibly with this farrago of
miscellaneous assertions? Will not the value of them be judged
simply according to the fancy, o r the prejudices, of - the jury?
And is this not reducing a trial to a farce?
Such might be the feeling of the Ameri- can or the Englishman;
but the Frenchman could match it in his judgment of meth- ods. Is
it possible,-he might say, that this everlasting fencing on the
admissibility of evidence 1s reany calculated to bring out the
truth? Again and again, one finds ones self at the very crux of the
matter, but some metaphysical objection closes the lips of the
witness. Moreover, the effort expended on these technical matters
is so exhausting that the pomt of view of all concerned be- comes a
false one. You not only refuse to let in all the light that can be
had the subject, but you fix attention so intensely on the rules of
the game that the real object- the ascertainment of the
truth-ceases to be, as it should be, the one absorbing pur- pose of
judge and jury. With us, the truth is the thing constantly sought
for; we may dash about wildly in our search for it, but our eyes
are open, our hands are untied, and we get it at last if there is
any way of hunt- ing it down.
-That the one way is as good as the other would be a bold
assertion: but that each has its advantages and each its drawbacks
there can be no question. Probably the opinion of FltzJames Stephen
that, on the whole, mis- carriages of justice have, in practice,
been found t o be just about as likely under one system as under
the other, is not very far from being the opinion of the ablest
students of the subJect. But to hold this opinion is very different
from asserting that questions of procedure are of no importance I t
- is quite possible that the English method has worked out, among
the peoples of whose tra- ditlons and temperament it is an outcome,
far better than the Continental method could have done, and vzce
But the funda- mental fact is that the right working of eith- er
depends essentially on the desire to do justice. Given this, and
either method will be made to serve the ends of truth and equlty;
the-right of the accused on the one
hand not to be condemned without convinc- ing evidence, and of
the State on the other not t o be paralyzed in the upholding of the
law by trivial o r unreasonable dificulties, will be paramount,
however the external orm may seem to stand in the way. Popes
dictum, Whateer is best administered is best, applies more truly to
the forms of the administration of justice than it does forms of
government in general.
Interesting aspect of the questlon ed by these comparisons
relates to the degree of strictness with which the rules of proced-
ure should be appiied. Under the English system, there has been at
various times a vast amount of abuse arising from a sense- less
magnifying of technicalities. In Eng- land, procedure was long ago
so reformed as almost completely- to rid criminal trials of this
reproach. In our own country, the agi- tation of the subJect durmg
the past twenty years has accompllshed notable improvement in
pract&e$but there is still room for much more. The fact that
all the great natlons of the Contment get on without a large part
of those rules of procedure which we regard as so essential does
not justify a general and undiscriminating laxity in the
application of those rules; this would be sure t o mean par-
tiality and inequity at best, and something like chaos at worst.
But that consideration may properly be adduced to fortify the argu-
ment from common-sense against the erec- tion of technical rules
into a sacredness that 1s foreign to them nature. The rules should
he obeyedstrictly, and above all uniformly; but they should not be
stretched beyond their natural meaning, made so-exacting as to
demand for their fulfilment performance that borders on
impossibility.
It IS in reference to the subject of immu- nity that this
question of the limits to the saeredness of a principle of
procedure is most strikingly exemplified. The Constitu- tional
principle-wholly absent from the pro- cedure in French trials-that
no person shall belEompelled, in any criminal case, to be a witness
against himself, has been construed to cover so much more than what
the words themselves say, that it has acquir- ed the name of the
criminals privilege. This, it seems to us, could never have come
about if the distinction between principles of high import in
themselves and principles which are mere practical rules the
attain- ment of an ulterior end had been borne in mind. There is
nothing inherently wrong. nothing inherently oppressive, about
asking an accused person to tell his in court; but the process is
liable to abuse, and the Constitutional provision is based
solely
-
the belief that the only safe way to prevent the abuse 1s to
exempt the accused from any necesslty of answering questions. Such
be- ing the case, let the rule be obeyed by all means; but let it
be obeyed and n o more. It 1s senseless to girdle it about with one
line of defence after another, for fear that some- how o r other it
mlght be violated. A viola- tion of the rule 1s no t a n evil in
~tself , for the rule is not a good in Itself, to treat it with the
fearful reverence belonglag to the fundamental rlghts of person or
property is n o t only mischievous, but senseless
THE PUBLIC DEFENDER. The Plan to have a publlc defender has
doubtless suffered from the tltle proposed for that officer. I t
seems t o assume that hls duty is simply to seek to obtain ac.
quittal. But State law-s have long guaran- teed to accused persons
defence by a quali- fied attorney BY many a fee ist regularly
allowed to this temporary public defender. The creation of the
public defender aims t o Put this defence on a better basls The
Massachusetts Commlssion on Immigration has found that hundreds of
misunderstand ing and mlsunderstood poor persons yearly suffer
through the entrusting of their cases to men lacking in ablllty,
honesty, or ergy; and it recommends the establishment of a public
defender as essential to pre. vent crime and teach respect for the
law.
The sole places in America which have made trial of the public
defender~are Loe Angeles, where one has served since Janu. ary,
1914, as a State officer, and Portland, Oregon. where prlvate
provision has been made for the malntenance of the office. The law
authorizing the innovatlon in Okla- homa was vetoed by the
Governor. In five months Attorney Ward of Los Angeles ha
investlgated 3,000 cases, and has appeared in 135 of these in the
criminal courts Thr District Attorney, admitting hls hostcity t c
the plan at the outset, remarks that you are performmg a duty which
tlm office has attempted In safeguarding the rlghts of the
defendant; and I belleve under the circum, stances your position
gives you a better opportunity to perform that duty than the
prosecutor has It appears that the mosi crying need was for some
one w~lling t c verify the stones of the accused and Ene witnesses
In their behalf. Men, again, whc dld no t realize that many trials
involve questions of law as well as of fact, or men mentally
defective, would plead guilt: though they had committed no crime,
or on palliated by circumstances. Accused, fina:
T h e Nation. .y, who did not know that the law gave them nme t
o make a defence, -would plead gullty 50 as t o receive a minimum
fine.
Tne civil side of the Los Angeles work has revealed need f o r
relief whlch would 2therwlse cost too much. Many have won wage
settlements when they had not the ante of a meal. Like the Legal
Aid So- xeties, the pubhc defender gives the he to the charge that
the courts are only for the rlch. Portlands public defender has
labored only in police courts. The Munici- pal Judge testifies that
he has given a new meaning to the guarantee of a fair and impartial
trial, and he himself wrltes in Case and Oowzment of the correction
of the gravest defect of the Western police court- the disregard of
the rules of evldence ob- served In a court of record, s o that
dozens of persons are convicted on hearsay testi- mony and
testimony otherwise incompetent.
The reiterated objection to the public de- fender is that the
State concedes the accused every safeguard; he must be indicted by
a grand jury, on a sworn accusation; he 1s confronted by his
witnesses; he LE allowed challenges and pleas, and twelve men must
agree on his guilt. One really wonders, remarks Bench und Bar, how
a conviction can ever be secured. But the fact is that many charges
are backed by colored evidence, and that action by the grand Jury
is often hhrried. The machinery of the law is directed by a public
officer eager f o r results. Fitted against hired lawyers, he
acquires aggressiveness not eas- ily shaken off Where tested, the
public de- fender bas not hampered the law, but has facilitated it
by cooperation with the d m trict attorney, and has reduced
expenses by pointing out cases where prosecution IS use- less H e w
~ l l obviously be no more Inclined to acqult a guilty man than the
prosecutor to convict an innocent.
To maintain that there should everywhere be a publlc defender
would be absurd. The innovatlon is one to be introduced slowly. One
locahty may learn from the experience of another. The
investigations undertaken separately by the Phi Delta Phi Society
and the New York County Lawyers Associat~on should show whether a
public defender is deslrable here. There IS no doubt that In many
courts the ignorant and helpless Suf- fer at the hands of petty
exploiters; there is little doubt that, even apart from such
shysters, the machinery of Justice frequent- ly works with
roughness. There may be i variety of remedies. May not the public
ldefender prove to be one of them? . . , - 8
[Vol. 99, No. 2561 CENTURY WAVERLEY.
Nothing in Waverley is more romantic than the story of its
varying fortunes, from the day when, upon the unfavorable opinion
of a critical frlend, Scott threw aside its first half-dozen
chapters, without either reluctance or remonstrance, to the day,
nme years later, when, happenmg to want some fishing-tackle for the
use of a guest, he look- ed into an old writing-desk and the long-
lost manuscript presented itself. Like the Dminherited K n ~ g h t
of a later tale, the neg- lected chapters went forth with no recom-
mendatlon save their own merit The au- thor of Marmion could not
afford to risk his poetical reputation in a new style of
composition1 Nor was it certain at first that his hesitation was
not well founded. The pubhc did not appear to welcome the anonymous
production Yet thls indlffer- ence was short-lived. Scott confessed
that after the first two or three months its pop- ularity had
increased in a degree which must have satisfied the expectations of
the author, had these been far more sanguine than he ever
entertained. A httle longer, and it became evident that a new era
had been inaugurated m English literature This was in 1814 A
hundred years later finds the serles of romances thus begun
flourlsh- ing in undiminished popularity, and every aspiring author
hoping for a tithe of the suc- cess of the novels that poured forth
from the Wizards pen.
.
People sometimes amuse themselves by asking one another in what
perlod of the worlds h~s tory they would choose to have lived. It
would be easy to make a worse answer than to say. In the early part
of the n~neteenth century, when one could he sure of a n e v novel
by Scott every year. One might imagine the Ulster Conference
adjournmg for a few days in order that the leading members of His
Majestys Govern- ment and of His Majestys Opposition might finish
the latest romance spun by the Wiz- ard of the North No murder
trlal would complete wlthout copious quotations from the newest
volume from Edinburgh, not nec- essarily because of the relevancy
of any- thing uttered by hero o r heroine, but bs- cause of the
compelling interest of the scenes. The opposing lawyers would vie w
~ t h each other for the privilege of readmg as much as posslble to
the jury. High-school students, neglecting their prescribed read-
ing, would cover several times as much ground in the fascinatmg new
story, nor c r e d ~ t a bold prophet who should speak of the day
when so irresistible a book would
lfind its way to the college entrance list.
-
July 30, 19141 But do you mean to imply that as a n hie
torical romancer Scott was perfect? On1 thing we like ahout the
author of Waver ley is that he did not think so himself. H seems
almost pained that so careless a plec of writing should have won so
great a su( cess. The whole adventures of Waverley in his movements
up and down the countr: with the Highland cateran Bean Lean, h
points out, just as if he were a professor o English ,literature,
are managed withou much skill. Robertson Nicoll has just bee:
demonstrating Scotts glorious confusion in Midlothian. Then there
is the awfu slip in the seventh chapter of The A;$,
. quary, where he makes the huge disk o a setting sun sink into
the ocean off thl east coast of Scotland. Moreover, especial ly in
Waverley, he is long in getting un der way, and more than a
uncertain 0. his course. His third reading of Pride ant Prejudice
brings from him a sigh. The bow-WOW strain I can do myself, like
an1 now going, but the exquisite touch whicl renders ordinary
commonplace things anc characters interesting from the t ruth the
description and the sentiment is tienlec me With limitations like
these, how it that he and his tales have survived : hundred
years?
I
Let the shameful truth come from the nov elist himself. After
confessing the lack plan in Waverley, he immediately added: It
suited best, however, the road I wantec to travel, and permitted me
to ~ntroducf some descriptions of scenefy and manners to which the
reality gave an interest whicl the powers of the author might have
other wise failed to attain for them. And in an other place he is
even bolder in setting inter est above technical perfection or even
his torical accuracy. He t h a t would please thf modern world, he
writes, yet presen! thr exact impression of a tale of the Mlddlr
Ages, will repeatedly find that he will bc oblige& in despite
of his utmost exertions t o sacrifice the last to the first object.
I1 is unnecessary to read farther. Here waL evidently a man who was
determined to de light his readers even at the cost of offend ing
the antiquaries. Let his knowledge .of the past, and his conscious
tampering wlth I t , be the measure of his guilt. Carlyle hit him a
harder blow. He has message,
, according to the Prince of Message-Bearers. We should not be
surprised if the romancer had instinctively avoided anything resem-
bling one. How brazen, then, for Waverley and his fellows to be
marching along after a hundred years, their eyes, not dim, nor
their natural force -abated!
- 1 . , A d
The W a t i o n Foreign Correspondence
SCHOOL EXAMINATIONS IN ENGLAND- THE VALUE OF THE OXFORD LO
CALS-THEIR SCOPE AND SIGWIFI CANCE
LONDON, July 17 There IS a familiar story of how a Frencl
Minister of Public Instruction one day pullem out hls watch, and
remarkecl that at that mo ment every schoolboy in France was taking
i lesson in such-and-such a sublect The tal IS not true, but Den
trovato, and the tltle of 1 Trowatore belongs in this sense to the
late Ed ward Bowen, of Harrow. who invented th story as a satire on
the Contineutkl ten6enc: to the over-regulation of education. But
ther exists an office in Oxford where the secretar: -a
distinguished mathematical don-migh pull out hls watch a t nine
oclock next Thurs day mornlng, and declare. At this hour 15,001
Enghsh schoolboys and schoolgirls in all part, of the country-from
Berwick t o Weymouth znd from Penzance to Great Yarmouth-wil sit
down to tackle my examination papers 11 arithmetic For next week is
one of thl most important in the English school year- the week of
the Oxford Locals
Forcign students of English secondary edu -ation have scarcely
given due attentlon to thc p a r t played in its development by the
local examinations oJ the older universities. Unti the last few
years the national Governmen h a d little to do with the secondary
schools There had grown up a large number of sucl schools of
varying types and under divers -.ontrol-old endowed schools.
schools foundec 3y religious denominations and other corpora,
tlons. and schools owned by private mdivid. uals. It all seemed
utterly chaotic-an exam. ple of independence run mad Yet, in fact
;his apparently heterogeneous mass of institu. :ions was largely
coordinated by an examina. ion system, Orianated by Oxford, and
after- flards adopted by Cambridge also. which. whilc tllowing
elasttcity of method, brought tht Nark of these schools to the test
of a commor jtandard The impartial outside criterlon thu! tpplied t
o wealthy and poor schools alike gav6 L recognltion to good
teaching wherever pas t o be found. and helped to kill off the pre.
:entious academies, so called, whose ineffi. :iency had hitherto
escaped exposure. In thc 3mallcr rural towns, especially. the local
ex- tminations of the two universities did muck .o raise the tone
of the secondary schools ong before the national Government
attempt-
anything in the way of Inspection and as- xstance.
Next weeks Oxford local exammations m1 ,e held slmultaneously at
41 centres in or neal London, 351 in the provlnces. and 1 3 abroad
3f the last group, three centres are In Nen :ealand, one in Natal,
one at St. Kitts, one n the Bahamas, one at Malta. one at Hong-
:ong. one at a mission settlement at Chefoo, nd four In Belgium.
where the convent chools for mrls attract many English pupils. !he
establishment of a local centre IS not a ery intricate affair Most
of the work is one by some resident interested in education, Tho
undertakes the duties of local secretary e gathers around him local
committee t o hare the financial responsibihty and take urns m
assisting in the supervision in the xamination room Some centres
admit boys nly, others,glrls, only, and others both boys s d girls
The ldcal committee has to guar-
I
125 mtee t o the Oxford Delegacy of Local Exam- Inations that I
t will nresent not less than twenty-five candldates, each paying-
to head- quarters a fee of 1, o r that, in default of the full
number, It will make up the balance of fees The committee is
authorized to charge the candidates an additional fee of a few
shil- lings to meet the local expenses of hire of examination room,
stationery. postage. and the superintending examiners railway fare,
board, and lodging. At some centres the number of canddates
considerably exceeds a hundred. In such cases the local committee
can afford to reduce its local fee to very small sum, and, at the
same time. have surplus to spend on prizes.
Candidates may come from any school or may have been privately
taught They enter themselves for either the senior, the Junior, the
preliminary examination. They are not ehmble for honors in the
senior if over nine- teen years of age, or In the lunior over
seven- teen, or in the preliminary over fourteen, but candidates
for a pass certificate are admitted though exceedmg these ages
The senior examination comprises twenty- three sections. (1)
arlthmetic: (2) rehaous knowledge: (3) history; (4) Enghsh language
and 1iteraNre; (5) geography; (6) polltical economy, etc., (7)
Latin; (8) Greek, (9) French: (10) German. (11) Italian. (12)
Spanish; (13) mathematics; (14) higher math- ematics, (15) botany:
(16) chemistry: (17) physics, (18) domestic science and hygiene,
(19) music; (20) bookkeeping; (21) needle- work; (22) natural
science, and (23) drawing To obtam a certificate candldate must
satisfy the examiners in at least five sub~ects, of which four must
be from sectlons (1) to (19). No one may offer more than eight
subJects rom sections (2) t o (23) The scheme is thus distinctly an
elective one, while discouraging soft snaps It is announced that
the quality of the handwriting and of the spelling and the style of
the composition will be taken into ac- -aunt throughout the
examInatIon
Still further alternatives are offered in the 3etmls of the
varlous sections. so that the schools which send candidates are not
lbllped follow an identical curriculum There are choices, for
example, in the books of Scripture that may be stuaed for ( 2 ) .
in the serlods of history for ( 3 ) . in the Enghsh clas- sics for
(41, and in the Latin and Greek books Cor (7) and (8). The music is
entirely the- retical, but no one can pass in chemistry or mtany
without satlsfymg practlcal tests A 31milw- syllabus, but less
advanced and less rarled. is prescribed for the lunior examina-
;ion, w1thtwenty sections, and for the prc- lmlnary, with
seventeen
The experience of many years has brought ;he management of these
examinations to a ugh pitch of efficiency.. The instructions is-
sued from headquarters at Oxford t o superln- ending examiners and
local commlttees, as re11 as to CanChdates, make what appears like
, complicated scheme work with perfect moothness. At each centre
the supenntend- n g examiner is an Oxford appolnted by he Delegacy
He has nothing to do with udging the answers, but IS responsible
for the upervision during the whole of the examina- ton week. le
hds to see. for instance, that he local committee has housed the
examma- Lon In adequate rooms with a desk space of
feet for^ each candidate. that the sealed Nackets of questlon
papers are opened and he contents distrlbuted at the prescribed
tmes,- that the answers are collected accord-